2019 Overwatch League MVP Jay 'Sinatraa' Won is moving to Valorant

(Image credit: Jay Won (Twitter))

The San Francisco Shock crushed the Vancouver Titans 4-0 to claim the 2019 Overwatch League championship, largely on the strength of OWL MVP Jay "Sinatraa" Won, who as we reported last year "took matters into his own hands with a dominant Doomfist." Now it appears that he's taking matters into his own hands once again, but in a very different way, as ESPN has reported that he's retiring from competitive Overwatch play in order to play Valorant for the Sentinels esports org.

While Won's move to Valorant has yet to be made official, the Shock did confirm his departure from the team on Twitter:

The Overwatch League also acknowledge his retirement in a statement. "The Overwatch League is a community first and foremost," it said. "We appreciate the great play and personality that Sinatraa brought to the community, we’ll miss him, and we also wish him the best for the future."

Won addressed his retirement himself in a message posted to Twitlonger, saying that he "lost passion" for Overwatch after the Grand Finals last year.

"idk what the real killer was for me but maybe it was 2-2-2 lock maybe it was bans im not sure... i just know it was hard for me to log on to play and i didnt have fun in scrims/ranked at all anymore. i did not make this decision in 1 day it took a full month of non stop thinking every day and sleepless nights from being so stressed. it fucking sucked but ultimately i wanted to do whats right for me," he wrote.

"i wanna thank NRG/SHOCK and OWL for giving me a chance and making my dreams come true. (shoutout andy, brett, jaime <3) last thing, i just wanna say sorry to all my fans, fans of OWL, and everyone on shock. in the past month i did not give OW/OWL my all and it showed in scrims and even in OWL so im sorry."

Interestingly, he did not confirm his move to Valorant in the message, but he did in a followup tweet:

The Shock's parent company, NRG Esports, is assembling a Valorant squad of its own, according to the report, but because the Overwatch League does not allow retiring players to sign with organizations that are either parent or sister to a OWL team, Won isn't eligible to play for it. Sentinels were previously involved in operating the Los Angeles Gladiators team, but withdrew from that organization in September 2019 following the settlement of a lawsuit with Gladiators owner Kroenke Sports and Entertainment.

A more interesting issue than the contract complications, though, is the potential impact of Won's move on the Overwatch pro scene. Prior to joining the Overwatch League, Won was a Counter-Strike: Global Offensive player, according to ESPN, and so the move to Valorant, which bears many similarities to CS:GO, could be seen as a natural transition. But Won was one of the league's most high-profile players, especially after his commanding play in the Grand Finals less than a year ago. Overwatch remains a massively popular game—and esport—while Valorant is still in closed beta, but even so the loss of such a big name has to hurt.

PRODUCTS
Andy Chalk
US News Lead

Andy has been gaming on PCs from the very beginning, starting as a youngster with text adventures and primitive action games on a cassette-based TRS80. From there he graduated to the glory days of Sierra Online adventures and Microprose sims, ran a local BBS, learned how to build PCs, and developed a longstanding love of RPGs, immersive sims, and shooters. He began writing videogame news in 2007 for The Escapist and somehow managed to avoid getting fired until 2014, when he joined the storied ranks of PC Gamer. He covers all aspects of the industry, from new game announcements and patch notes to legal disputes, Twitch beefs, esports, and Henry Cavill. Lots of Henry Cavill.

Latest in FPS
Destiny 2 Rite of the Nine: The Emissary, massive, ominously standing at the edge of a water basin.
Oops! Bungie rolled out Destiny 2's Rite of the Nine event three weeks early, and new loot is already dropping
A soldier looks out over the Verdansk map, as a single tear rolls down his cheek.
The original Verdansk map is returning to Call of Duty: Warzone, to celebrate which we get a soldier crying to Nat King Cole
FragPunk codes - A close-up shot of a mercenary wearing a mask with glowing eyes.
All FragPunk codes and how to redeem them
An evil-looking demon with red eyes and horns
You can theoretically beat Doom: The Dark Ages without using a gun, but 'You'd have a hard time, that's for sure,' says the game's director
Official Doom Guy art superimposed over Vault 666 Fallout-themed background.
Fallout-themed Doom mod Vault 666 has multiple endings, an OP Dogmeat companion, and a Ron Perlman-impersonating narrator so good, I was worried it was AI-generated at first
The Doomslayer in armor
Doom: The Dark Ages won't end with the Slayer in a coffin waiting for the start of Doom 2016: 'That would mean that we couldn't tell any more medieval stories'
Latest in News
Recently appointed Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan.
Here comes Intel's new CEO: a semiconductor veteran that won the same prestigious award as Jensen Huang and Lisa Su
BURBANK, CALIFORNIA - AUGUST 15: Protestors attend the SAG-AFTRA Video Game Strike Picket on August 15, 2024 in Burbank, California. (Photo by Lila Seeley/Getty Images)
8 months into their strike, videogame voice actors say the industry's latest proposal is 'filled with alarming loopholes that will leave our members vulnerable to AI abuse'
Orithopter shooting down another in Dune
Dune: Awakening confirms air-to-air combat in ornithopters
live action Jimbo the Jester from Balatro holding a playing card and addressing the camera
LocalThunk forbids AI-generated art on the Balatro subreddit: 'I think it does real harm to artists of all kinds'
Inzoi - A Zoi&#039;s face in three graphical presets showing a progression from a slightly blurry minimum specs to a higher fidelity recommended specs.
Oh great, the full Inzoi system requirements are posted and I'm barely above the minimum specs so I guess my Zois will be beautifully blurry
Mark Darrah
BioWare veteran says a big delay is better than lots of little ones, because sometimes you just gotta 'burn it down and take the other fork in the road'